Sunday, March 6, 2022

US CONVOY TO DC DECENT SIZE

Saturday, March 5, 2022

ABRAHAM HOFFER, MD, PHD: VITAMIN B3 NIACIN + VITAMIN C TREATS SCHIZOPHRENIA

17 young men who, in their teens, were psychotic.  They were treated by orthomolecular means all across North America, they all went back to college and studied medicine, and became doctors.  One of them was the son of a very prominent American writer and he applied to Harvard Medical School . . . he wanted to study medicine at Harvard Medical School.  They wanted him badly because to get into Harvard you have to have money; not only money but intelligence and you have to have a name.  It all helps.  So he wrote to me before he applied.  He said he wasn't sure whether he should tell the admissions committee that he had had schizophrenia or not.  In the end, he said that he had to be honest and tell them what he had had.  Now the admissions committee didn't want him because they didn't want any schizophrenics but they also wanted him because he had this famous name.  So they said to him, "Come back tomorrow, and we'll tell you what our decision is.  So the next day, he came back, and they said to him, "That we know that you never get well from schizophrenia.  But you are well.  Therefore, you never had schizophrenia.  They admitted him.  And he is now the head of a large pediatric clinic doing well.  

39:20  Another patient of mine, he was very psychotic and was part of a double-blind controlled experiment.  He went through the placebo arm and didn't respond so we put him on vitamins and electric shock treatment as well.  He made a complete recovery.  He studied medicine, became a psychiatrist, and eventually became the president of a large psychiatric association . . . president.  

The third one today, he is today, head of the psychiatric department at a major American university but they don't know his history and he won't tell them, of course.  

The last one was a young man that I saw 4 years ago who came down from Alaska to see me.  Just saw him 4 months


"There's no right or wrong, just differences of opinion"

To some people, Fauci's remarks make you feel safe and nonjudgmental.  Being neither right nor wrong means you won't make errors or misjudgments in a field in which your knowledge is limited.  For some, maybe too many, that relieves them of the responsibility of thought and thinking.  If you take on the responsibility, it means you put a high price and investment on reaching the truth and being accurate and being right.  But as we start out on a topic, it's true that we all work out from a position of limited knowledge.  No one is born an Immanuel Kant.  But that doesn't excuse people from having to work out what's right from wrong.  There is a right answer and there is a wrong answer; there is right, and there is wrong.  There's no in-between right or wrong, there are only degrees of right or wrong, approximations that need correction, revision, or re-working.  If you're wrong, you get fired up about the opportunity to correct your position and so you study a little more, you more information, you integrate it, and come to new insights and new conclusions with the understanding that what you've concluded is not the final word on your topic.  To reduce knowledge to opinion means that Fauci is fucking with you.  

JOHNSON & JOHNSON: STILL TRUST THE AMERICAN MENGELE?

Indictment #1 

Indictment #2

Indictment #3

Indictment #4

Indictment #5

Indictments #6, 7, 10, 24, 67, 103, 296 . . . 

And the beat goes on

NEO-NAZIS HAD 10% PRESENCE AT 2014 MAIDAN BUT A 90% EFFECT.